School stress to blame for student depression

A third of children have considered suicide by age 16, survey shows
12th July 2013, 1:00am

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School stress to blame for student depression

https://www.tes.com/magazine/archive/school-stress-blame-student-depression

Stress at school is the biggest contributor to depression, self-harm and attempted suicide among young people, according to research published today.

Almost a third of children (32 per cent) have considered or attempted to end their own life by the age of 16, a YouGov survey of more than 2,000 young people across the UK suggests. And 29 per cent of respondents said that they had harmed themselves on purpose, according to the findings released by new UK-based charity MindFull.

Stress at school was found to be the main cause of depression among young people, cited by 54 per cent of those surveyed, followed by worrying about the future and low self-esteem.

The findings have prompted concern about the pressure placed on students. The charity, established by the people behind the campaign BeatBullying, is calling for mental health to be a “core theme” of the national curriculum and for all students to have access to counselling and support from a mentor.

Government statistics show that one in 10 children aged 5-16 in the UK has a clinically diagnosable mental health problem. Half of people with lifelong mental health problems experience their first symptoms by the age of 14.

Depression has also been identified as a major concern in other developed countries. A report published in May by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the US said that up to 20 per cent of children in the country experience a mental disorder each year and that “surveillance during 1994-2011 has shown the prevalence of these conditions to be increasing”.

According to figures compiled by the Australian Bureau of Statistics, one in four Australians aged 16-24 had a mental disorder in 2007. Anxiety disorders, which affected 15 per cent of young adults, were the most common.

Participants in the MindFull survey, aged 16-25, were asked to reflect on their experiences when they were school-aged children. They said that they found discussing mental health problems difficult because of embarrassment and the fear of rejection or becoming a burden.

More than one in 10 participants (12 per cent) said that when they were under the age of 16, they felt as if they were a failure nearly every day. Almost a quarter (24 per cent) of participants with mental health problems believed that this had affected their school or work life every day, and 61 per cent had skipped lessons when they felt depressed.

Francis Burrows, director of operations at MindFull, said that young people feel stressed and anxious because of exams and the pressure to achieve. Pressures on teachers - such as school inspections - are often “mirrored” by students, he said.

“Pressure is put on children by schools, families and other children. If a young person is not that confident, they will find these expectations difficult,” he said.

Learning about mental health issues should be a “really important” part of personal, social and health education, he added, to reduce the stigma attached to mental illness.

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